Literature DB >> 6107735

Recurrence of Pelecypod-associated cholera in Sardinia.

S Salmaso, D Greco, B Bonfiglio, M Castellani-Pastoris, G De Felip, A Bracciotti, G Sitzia, A Congiu, G Piu, G Angioni, L Barra, A Zampieri, W B Baine.   

Abstract

From Oct. 30 to Nov. 7, 1979, 10 people in the Sardinian province of Cagliari had onset of bacteriologically confirmed cholera. Two symptom-free excretors of Vibrio cholerae O:1 were detected in household contacts of the patients. There were no deaths. All but 1 of the 12 people with V. cholerae O:1 infection gave a history of recent consumption of marine bivalves known locally as arselle (pelecypods). Triplicate matched neighbourhood controls for each of the first 7 cases identified were also interviewed; none had recently eaten arselle. V. cholerae O:1 was also recovered from samples of water and bivalves obtained from a lagoon on the outskirts of the city of Cagliari. Arselle had also been implicated as the vehicle of transmission in 1973 in the last outbreak of cholera in Sardinia. It seems unlikely that cholera transmission had persisted locally in the interim.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 6107735     DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(80)92553-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  7 in total

1.  Cholera and severe toxigenic diarrhoeas.

Authors:  D R Nalin
Journal:  Gut       Date:  1994-02       Impact factor: 23.059

Review 2.  New knowledge on pathogenesis of bacterial enteric infections as applied to vaccine development.

Authors:  M M Levine; J B Kaper; R E Black; M L Clements
Journal:  Microbiol Rev       Date:  1983-12

Review 3.  The human pathogenic vibrios--a public health update with environmental perspectives.

Authors:  P A West
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  1989-08       Impact factor: 2.451

4.  Detection of ctx gene positive non-O1/non-O139 V. cholerae in shrimp aquaculture environments.

Authors:  Rao B Madhusudana; P K Surendran
Journal:  J Food Sci Technol       Date:  2011-04-15       Impact factor: 2.701

5.  Seroepidemiology of cholera in Gulf coastal Texas.

Authors:  M D Hunt; W E Woodward; B H Keswick; H L Dupont
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  1988-07       Impact factor: 4.792

6.  The sixth and seventh cholera pandemics are due to independent clones separately derived from environmental, nontoxigenic, non-O1 Vibrio cholerae.

Authors:  D K Karaolis; R Lan; P R Reeves
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1995-06       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  Application of Poisson kriging to the mapping of cholera and dysentery incidence in an endemic area of Bangladesh.

Authors:  Mohammad Ali; Pierre Goovaerts; Nushrat Nazia; M Zahirul Haq; Mohammad Yunus; Michael Emch
Journal:  Int J Health Geogr       Date:  2006-10-13       Impact factor: 3.918

  7 in total

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